What to do about Kidney Stones?

A chiropractor in our town helped a woman who had kidney stones ... when all the hospital/clinic could suggest was taking X-rays to see whether or not the kidney stones had moved from one day the next.

The Chiropractor looked something up in a book and told her to drink 6 CLASSIC coke-a-colas in an hour

And then to eat pureed asparagus (either from a baby food bottle, or take a can of asparagus & puree it yourself)

Yes, it worked, she said!

And she had had nausea and terrible pain

Hoping one's stomach can handle 'the coke-a-cola'

Don't know all the reasons one might get kidney stones, but it might be a later to show up issue for someone with autoimmune metabolic issues ... first showing up as gallstones; then 15 years later as a thyroid metabolism issue such as exposure to the CFIDS, autoimmune causing chemical ... 2-butoxyethanol would cause

http://www.valdezlink.com/rbc_size_shape.htm

The kidneys produce hormones that

help build strong bones

and

help form red blood cells.

2-butoxyethanol targets the liver, the kidneys, blood and blood forming organs (other organs/glands, too).  FIND the ANEMIA *

(Look at Red Blood Cells)      Find anemia

Exposure to glycol butyl ether can cause gallstones ... later kidney stones

Anemia?  Not considered that serious . . . people think

But it is ...if it is the ANEMIA that BUTYL causes

You can't just get some iron * and think that the blood forming organs will process it

and all is well

 Check for autoimmune action on the kidneys  *  ...    liver  *     ...  *

The kidneys produce hormones that help build strong bones and help form red blood cells.

The kidney contains scattered cells that secrete erythropoietin,

a hormone essential for production of red blood cells.

"Anemia of prematurity occurs in premature infants at 2 to 6 weeks of age and results from diminished erythropoietin response to declining hematocrit levels. ... low serum levels of erythropoietin (EPO) Erythropoietin, or its alternative erythropoetin or EPO, is a glycoprotein hormone that controls erythropoiesis, or red blood cell production. It is a cytokine for erythrocyte (red blood cell) precursors in the bone marrow. Also called hematopoietin or hemopoietin, it is produced by the kidney, and is the hormone that regulates red blood cell production. It also has other known biological functions. For example, erythropoietin plays an important role in the brain's response to neuronal injury.[1] EPO is also involved in the wound healing process"

RBC

compare to your own counts over time 

Blood counts - Men's chart  - Women's Chart

Track BP, Blood Sugar, Body Temp *

 * When Red blood cells are immature - other tests can be 'off'

 

Help for Kidney Stones? *

valdezlink.com/re/msn/renalliver/kidneystones.htm

 

Wonder if the family of Bernie Mac recalls times of 'flu'

& if there was anemia going on for him, too?  *

 

Shared some thoughts with a Vietnam Vet  *

 

8-16-08